Celebrating Cinema

Celebrating Cinema
Showing posts with label Matthew Libatique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matthew Libatique. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2011

Black Swan (2010)

by Darren Aronofsky












An Analysis

"I had the craziest dream last night." Black Swan expresses and examines the physical, psychological, familial, and sexual pressures on a ballerina, Nina Sayers (Natalie Portman), who has been chosen as a prestigious New York City ballet company's featured performer in this season's re-imagined production of Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake. To become the Swan Queen, Nina must exude the delicate purity of the White Swan then ascend as the Black Swan by corralling and evincing her dormant aggression and libido. In his fifth film, Darren Aronofsky's directs his second consecutive Best Acting nominated performance (Natalie Portman, Mickey Rourke). Black Swan follows Aronofsky's Pi (1998), Requiem for a Dream (2000), The Fountain (2006), and The Wrestler (2008).


<<<  SPOILERS BELOW  >>>

Please see the film before reading further

Aronofsky-as-Auteur

Clint Mansell
Aronofsky welcomes several of his regulars to his fifth film, including good luck charm, actor Mark Margolis (albeit as a scene-cut extra, he's in his 5th film with Aronofsky), director of photography Matthew Libatique (4th film), producer Scott Franklin (4th), actor Stanley Herman (3rd, who amusingly reprises his role as subway weirdo "Uncle Hank"), and parents Abraham and Charlotte Aronofsky (5th and 3rd, respectively).  Perhaps most important is Clint Mansell, who scores his fifth Aronofsky film. Though Mansell maintains some chords and progressions heard in Requiem, he re-writes Tchaikovsky in a new, dark mood.  

After a respite in The Wrestler, Aronofsky revisits his method of fusing real, in-film action with one character's fantasies, dreams, and paranoid delusions--in this film, they belong to Nina. Viewers cognizant of Pi will be prepared to handle another experiencing of this technique, and will be better able to perceive Nina's feelings and demons. None of his films are so terribly confusing as The Fountain, but newcomers to Aronofsky need a bit of prior warning or post-viewing guidance for Black Swan.

Requiem (above), Black Swan (below)
Though there is great stress between Nina and her mother Erica (Barbara Hershey), Aronofsky chose not use the same techniques that portrayed the Requiem relationship between Sara and Harry. No split screens, and no 180-degree camera swings.   


Nina's grapefruit breakfast reminds us of Sara Goldfarb's eggs-and-grapefruit diet in Requiem. We know what price Sara paid for such food controls. The fall-out of Nina's stricter diet is tempered by Nina's greater purpose, physical activity, and a hope for something achievable and earned, as opposed to Sara's TV appearance wish, which can only be bestowed.

Aronofsky's camera techniques create much of the film's mood. Aronofsky rightly uses the camera to present a very unsettled, confidence-lacking, on-the-brink-of-breakdown, paranoid Nina. Aronofsky also uses a steadicam that revolves around Nina when dancing, creating a visual maelstrom. 


The Camera "Following" Nina
Aronofsky continues his "following" technique he developed in The Wrestler. As we experienced Ram's point of view, most interestingly navigating the backstage corridors of boisterous arenas, we get a remarkably similar experience with Nina's navigating Lincoln Center's cinder-block underbelly.


One of Aronofsky's smartest habits is teaching us about worlds unfamiliar to most of us. He has taken us behind the scenes of professional wrestling, shown us mathematics, and taught us specifics of heroin addiction. In Black Swan he shows us the the little things that all dancers know but the rest of us do not. For instance, he shows us three scenes of Nina preparing ballet shoes--the first a montage of breaking down, scoring, and re-sewing them, the second a scene of Nina and Erica scorching ballet shoe ribbons, and the third a shot of Nina grinding her ballet shoes into a sand/glass mixture. These little teaching moments make us feel a part of Nina's world, and help us connect to Nina.

Last Aronofsky returns to his fade-to-white technique used in Pi and Requiem. Upon Nina's ascendancy as the unfettered Black Swan, Aronofsky ends the film with a fade to white to indicate, not a blinded-by-the-sun moment, but a more transcendent, triumphant moment. She has overcome adversity and demons, and has unlocked long-repressed personal and sexual strengths. She, like the Swan Queen, may have also killed herself.

Nina's Adversity

Erica, Feeding Her Daughter Icing
From the film's beginning, Nina's timidity seems incongruent with both her talent and success. She has thrived as a delicate, waif-like ballerina whose skills and prominence are only surpassed by an about-to-be-retired 40-something, Beth Macintyre (Winona Ryder). Like Beth, Nina in her new, headlining role soon feels the All About Eve (1950) footsteps of her nearest challenger, Lily (Mila Kunis). Nina also faces the physical pain of being a featured ballerina:  bleeding feet, split toenails, joints relieved by the painful pulling of a physical therapist. Nina still lives with her controlling, daughter-focused, helicopter mother, Erica, an unaccomplished dancer who retired at 28 to birth and raise Nina. Erica now makes paintings of Nina, sleeps in a chair in Nina's room, runs Nina's schedule, calls Nina several times a day, and, perhaps most controlling, undresses Nina to her panties. Erica has kept Nina from having friends. Maddeningly, to celebrate Nina's landing of the Swan Queen role, Erica forces cake on Nina, something very much out of Nina's Erica-monitored nutrition regimen. Last, and perhaps most important, though Nina has landed the role, she fails to convince the director, and herself, of her ability to succeed in the Black Swan half of the role.


The story's construction provides much of the film's brilliance. Early, Nina's primary source of conflict is with her mother. Next we see her start down a path to loosen up, to become independent and an adult. Both conflicts obscure her underlying psychiatric disorder(s). The delay and ambiguity in revealing the disorder(s) probably creates a great deal of strife for viewers who are impatient, new to Aronofsky, or new to any sort of avant-garde cinema. I do not suggest that Aronofsky not stick to his creative guns. Films like this create the opportunity in new audiences for reflection, multiple viewings, and exploration into a director's catalog.   


We desperately want Nina to succeed, to break away from her mother, and to become a sexy, confident woman and dancer. Tragically they converge alongside her peaking psychosis.


Not being a mental health professional, nor a dancing expert, nor familiar with Swan Lake, I shall mostly leave alone those realms in this analysis.


Thomas


Thomas and Nina
Thomas, the French director of Nina's ballet company, is a womanizing, smug, ass who produces great performances. A swan skeleton decorates his office while vaginally-themed art dominates his flat. When we first meet Thomas, he appears silently, standing in the rehearsal space's stadium seating. The dancers immediately disrobe, to a certain extent. We now know his power, and what he expects of dancers, both on and away from the dance floor. He quickly, though incredulously, pegs Nina as a virgin. Both Thomas and Lily, multiple times, tell Nina to loosen up. Thomas instructs Nina, "Go home and touch yourself." Nina allows herself such pleasure when she wakes in the morning in her bedroom, that is, until she notices her mother in the bedroom chair. When Nina eventually succeeds, Thomas transfers his paternalistic nickname for Beth onto Nina, "My Little Princess."


Nina's Hallucinations


Within the context of Black Swan, Nina's hallucinations demand attention and explanation. Two hallucinations deserve the most focus because they confuse, and because understanding them is essential to understanding reality within the film. When Nina and Lily are first introduced, Lily foreshadows, "Are you freaking out? I've been losing my mind."


Nina Hallucinating a Night with Lily
Nina's night out with Lily happened pretty much as shown... until, when Nina's is walking out of the club, Lily sticks her head out the exit door and calls after her. Lily calling after Nina outside the club is the first moment shown that night that never happened. The cab ride seduction never happened because Lily was never in the cab--it was Nina's fantasy. Lily spent that night with Tom, the dolt she met at the club; therefore, she could not have been in the cab. A second viewing of the club dancing scene shows not just Nina's physical comfort with Lily, but it also shows them eventually becoming virtually indistinguishable from one another on the dance floor, a bit of visual foreshadowing that helps us explain Nina's hallucination. Lily's actions in the apartment, particularly the mouthing of Nina's words as Nina speaks them (see Fight Club (1999)), reinforce that Lily was never inside the apartment. Through the hallucination, Nina progresses toward becoming more sexual and more independent, but, sadly, her psychosis is becoming more manifest.


Second is the broken mirror episode during the opening night performance. We see Nina attack Lily, stabbing her with a mirror shard. But, like all the previous times when Nina thought Lily was there yet saw a flash of herself (Nina's self) in Lily's place, we know that Lily once again is not really there. Nina of course has stabbed herself instead, and I believe it to be the work of her psychosis. 


Nina's Psychosis
There are other hallucinations one can misunderstand without compromising one's understanding of the film. Nina's cuticle mangling of course never happened--Aronofsky was kind enough to show us the reality, to let us in early on her penchant for hallucination. The woman who appears twice, once over Nina's bathtub and once in a corner of Nina's apartment... I have no idea who that is. My best guess is that she is Nina's mother, Erica, at the age when Erica retired to give birth to Nina. Nina seeing Lily and Thomas having sex off-stage was Nina's paranoid delusion. Nina's several mirror hallucinations suggests that Nina probably has some sort of dissociative or schizophrenic disorder. Last, and remarkably unimportant, is the final scene involving Beth and Nina. Though we see Beth self-mutilate, we also see Nina drop the bloody weapon as she flees into the hospital's elevator. It seems odd that Nina would not be tracked down by police before the end of the opening night performance, but I am willing to allow that such investigations take more time. More important, not only do I believe Nina stabbed Beth, it is also at this point in the film that I first suspected that Nina pushed Beth into traffic, causing her hospitalization in the first place. That last tantalizing question may be unanswerable, but it is worthy of a good smoke.   


Leitmotifs


Though not in the strict musical sense, Aronofsky's mise-en-scène uses leitmotifs of color to convey Nina's descent into psychosis, into sexuality, into the Black Swan. One is tempted to cry "cliché!" if not "racism!" with the white equals good, black equals bad formula, but Aronofsky can be excused easily, for the color palette set forth by Tchaikovsky's ballet is rather unavoidable. The embodiment of sexual confidence, Lily is always shown in black.  Nina is mostly in white or other light colors (including a very light-colored pink overcoat). Nina's first appearance in grey happens in Nina's first rehearsal in which she makes an attempt to liberate her sexuality, resulting in Thomas's funny in-joke, asking Natalie Portman's husband, "Would you fuck this girl?" 

Nina first dresses in black at the dance club, appropriately in a naughty little number supplied by Lily, which, along with similar hair, allows them to become indistinguishable on the dance floor. Indeed, during the club dancing scene we get a flash of Nina in her Black Swan makeup--her transformation has begun. Later, in the cab ride hallucination, we also notice Nina's black pants, perfect for her first sexual touching by someone else. We ultimately see her in her fully-clad black glory in opening night's second act as the Black Swan.


Lily, Hair Down
Hair also plays an important role in shaping our understanding of what Nina is feeling. We first notice a difference in hair when Nina sees Lily rehearsing with her hair down, something atypical among dancers thus far in the film. The night that Lily comes to take Nina out partying, we see Nina with her hair down already. She is ready to go. As mentioned above, the hair, along with the matching black outfits, allow Nina and Lily to become indistinguishable on the club's dance floor--Nina has absorbed Lily's level of sexuality. The symbolism of literally letting one's hair down may be too obvious, but it bloody works. Who among us was not immediately drawn to the hair-down dancing of Lily in that rehearsal?


Conclusion



Nina, Perfect
Nina's triumph is the peaking of her talent, her sexuality, and of her psychosis. Thomas asks as she lies bleeding, "What did you do?!" Nina responds, mostly to herself, "I felt it. I was perfect." I do not remember a film with so tragic a triumph. Even The Wrestler's Randy "The Ram" Robinson was tragic, but ended without triumph. Denouements with the simultaneous feelings of regret and success tend to be found in war movies. I welcome suggestions of films with similar endings.


Aronofsky continues to make challenging, brilliant films.  Here is to hoping his productivity moves toward Woody Allen's and away from Terrence Malick's (or at least the Malick of old), while continuing with the same level of innovation and creativity he has always given his grateful audiences.


Trailer to Black Swan (2010)

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

The Wrestler (2008)



by Darren Aronofsky


A Critique


Randy "The Ram" Robinson (Mickey Rourke)
Twenty years on from his biggest professional wrestling match, Randy "The Ram" Robinson (Mickey Rourke) pulls on the tights every weekend in school gymnasiums and fraternal lodges for purses a fraction of what they once were.  His only relationships are with Adam, a trailer park boy (John D'Leo); his daughter, Stephanie (Evan Rachel Wood), who he's abandoned much of her life; Cassidy (Marisa Tomei), his favorite stripper, as he is perhaps her favorite club regular; and the wrestling life itself. Former Onion editor-in-chief, Robert Siegel has written his first non-Onion film, a dark, dramatic, introspective piece.  Darren Aronofsky's fourth film leaves behind the storytelling and cinematic styles developed in his first three films in favor of slow-burning, emotional portrayal of Randy "The Ram" Robinson, The Wrestler.


The Actors


Cassidy (Marissa Tomei)
Rourke and Tomei each committed their bodies to this film. Rourke, 55 or 56 during filming, exercised a year and a half to display the muscled body of a pro wrestler that age. Rourke trained in pro wrestling maeuvers, doing many of the stunts himself. Forty-four-years-old Marissa Tomei displayed her remarkable, lithe body, which no doubt dropped jaws across theaters everywhere. More than than just their bodies, each actor was nominated for an Academy Award for The Wrestler.


<<<  SPOILERS BELOW  >>>

Please see the film before reading further



Aronofsky-as-Auteur

Aronofsky abandons many of his patterns, but retains a few aspects of his previous films while developing new techniques that could serve him well on future projects.


Cassidy and Ram at Cheeques
Aronofsky shuns any explicit representation of fantasy--concepts integral to his three previous films--favoring an intense infusion of realism. Paradoxically, the realism within the professional wrestling world transports wrestling's most ardent fans into their own worlds of fantasy.  Ram has fantasies about "making an honest woman" of Cassidy, but Aronofsky never shows us the fantasy. Ram, as an aging wrestler, and Cassidy, as an aging stripper, have also created their own tenuous delusions about the time left in their respective stations. They try desperately to hang onto their delusions while simultaneously trying to figure out "what next?"


Many personnel return to Aronofsky's team. Mark Margolis celebrates his fourth Aronofsky film, this time as Randy's landlord, Lenny. And after missing The Fountain (2006), Ajay Naidu and Scott Franklin return for their third go-round with Aronofsky, this time as a medic and producer, respectively. In a briefer role, Clint Mansell creates a quiet, lonely score in his fourth Aronofsky film.  Worth noting, Maryse Alberiti fills in for Matthew Libatique as Aronofsky's director of photography (cinematographer). Her background in filming documentaries lends a mighty talent to Aronofsky's documentary, vérité feel for The Wrestler.


As in Pi (1998) and Requiem for a Dream (2000), drugs are necessary for Ram to function. They play a less prominent on-screen role this time, but are no less important. The steroids and painkillers allow Ram to function comfortably to, similar to Pi's Max Cohen and Requiem's Harry Goldfarb.


The crowds' chants, particularly in the extreme match, sound remarkably similar to Tappy Tibbons' infomercial to which Sara Goldfarb is addicted in Requiem. The chanting again demonstrates a mob mindlessly ecstatic about something, be it wrestling or Tappy Tibbons.


The Opening Scene


Aronofsky leaves behind quick-cutting, camera wearing, and fades-to-white, using only one special technique throughout. The camera spends much of the film following Ram, when we only see his back and the back of his head. The film opens powerfully and quietly with a long shots of Ram's back to the camera--he's alone in an elementary school classroom after a remarkably small wrestling event. As he leaves the school, drives home, finds his landlord has "booted" his trailer park home like a car with overdue parking tickets. The camera follows him through the maze within a grocery store, backstage before events, and into Cheeques (Cassidy's strip club.) 


Ram, from the back
At Their Happiest, Ram & Stephanie
Why does Aronofsky use this "following" technique?  Coupled with many handheld camera shots, this following-from-behind technique gives a realistic, documentary feel. Given that we learn much about pro wrestling and its combatants' experiences, adding documentary-like camera techniques enhance the film's realism. Aronofsky also uses the camera technique so that, later in the film, he can draw a crowd-roar-enhanced parallel between Ram's wrestling life and his new life as a deli counter clerk. The "following" technique allows later for a counterpoint to Ram's loneliness. Aronofsky places the camera in front of Ram and Stephanie when they at their closest emotionally, in the abandoned building. It is the only time we see Ram directly facing the camera, and it is stirring.


Aronofsky also uses long shots a few time to demonstrate Ram's loneliness. In the first two long shots, we see Ram's loneliness, but he does not. The film opens with a long shot of Ram alone, clearly in an elementary classroom. In the next shot the camera pulls back to show just the pathetic size of the night's venue, an elementary gym. We don't see the long shot again until Ram leaves the hospital following his heart attack. Though we have seen his loneliness since the opening shot, this shot begins Ram's realization of his loneliness.  


Stephanie and Ram
Last, Aronofsky repeats a few similar locations, mostly from Requiem. The shot of Ram waking in the hospital reminds us of Sara Goldfarb in the hospital. Ram's Asbury Park, NJ boardwalk stroll with his daughter Stephanie and, particularly, the shot of them sitting in a glass-less picture window overlooking the ocean, remind us not only of Requiem's Coney Island setting, but of Marion at boardwalk's end. The boardwalk's end represents the ideal of Harry and Marion's relationship in Requiem, while the picture window shot represents the peak of Ram and Stephanie's relationship.


The Characters


Ram
Ram, and to a lesser extent Cassidy, are stuck in the past. Eighties hairband music, most frequently Quiet Riot's "Metal Health," provides the pop music soundtrack for Ram. Stephanie, by contrast, has posters of the modern band Vampire Weekend. Cassidy and Ram visit a vintage store. Like most parents, Ram reminds Stephanie of how adorable her child self was. Ram has his 1980s action figure, and the original 1980s Nintendo Entertainment Center with its Wrestle Jam '88 video game that featured his wrestling character.


Pam
Both Ram and Cassidy are living fantasy lives.  Neither uses his/her real name. Ram hides behind two sets of fake names. At the most fantastic he is The Ram, then Randy Robinson, then, his birth name, Robin Ramzinski. "Cassidy" is her stripper name; she is Pam. Though Ram and Cassidy are both in show business, Pam has created a separation between home and "customers" whereas Ram's professional and personal identities are blurred. After Ram jams his thumb into the meat slicer, he says "Robin" one last time, leaving Robin behind forever. When Cassidy flees Cheeques to stop Ram performing, she reclaims her Pam identity.






Ram with the Trailer Park Kids
Ram and "The Ayatollah"
Ram's character arc is relatively simple, yet gripping. After Ram's heart attack, he feels alone, and lonely. He seeks loves from his only family, daughter Stephanie. After initial rejection, he pursues a extra-club relationship with Cassidy. He has moderate success with Cassidy, but she somewhat rejects him too. Ram then has great success with Stephanie, but is rejected harshly by Cassidy. Distracted by the rejection, he has a night of whiskey, sex, and cocaine, loses track of time, and missed his dinner with Stephanie. Stephanie rejects him once and for all. Feeling he's lost all his interpersonal relationships, including the one with the trailer park children, against doctor's orders, he returns to wrestling because it is the only thing he knows. It is the only relationship he thinks never lets him down. Cassidy, after the dim lighting no longer hides her age, which drives her from the stage, becomes Pam and attends Ram's match in attempts to stop him wrestling. Pam is too late. Robin is gone. Only Ram remains, and he has moved on. Near the match's end, so has she. He wrestles his Iron Sheik-like nemesis The Ayatollah of 20 years ago, ending the match with a leaping-from-the-top-rope Ram-Jam, his signature move. Screen fades to black, credits role. We are left to speculate what happens next. Given his heart-problems throughout the last match, most audience members will leave assuming Ram died during that one, last Ram-Jam.  He died the way he wanted, in the arms of the only relationship he was ever good at, wrestling.

trailer

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The Fountain (2006)

by Darren Aronofsky


A Critique

Tommy's love for Izzi is his drive
Six years after Requiem for a Dream, Darren Aronofsky surmounts consider-able production problems to give us his third film, The Fountain.  In a golden wave of imagination, Aronofsky creates his complex vision of an immortality myth. Because these myths are timeless and ubiquitous, though varied among cultures, Aronofsky sets The Fountain in three time periods and in three very different places. Hugh Jackman plays Tomas, a conquistador captain in 1500 C.E.; Dr. Tommy Creo, a present day American cancer research surgeon; and a mysterious bald spaceman in 2500 C.E., a sort of celestial Omega Man. Rachel Weisz also plays Queen Isabel (past) and Izzi Creo, Dr. Tom Creo's wife (present).  

Tomas the Conquistador crosses an ocean, searches, and kills to reach the legendary Tree of Life. Dr. Tom Creo consumes himself in his search for a cure to Izzi's of her brain's cancer. The space man, alone in a biosphere spaceship orb--his Valley Forge--cares for and speaks to the orb's centerpiece, a magnificent old-growth tree. The Fountain demands at least two viewings with much contemplation in between.


The decision to write on The Fountain is difficult. I still do not feel I understand the film, but I wanted to give it my best attempt without consulting the writings of others.  Below is that attempt.



<<<  SPOILERS BELOW  >>>

Please see the film before reading further




A test for Tomas
Though our Fountain experience differs greatly from his previous two films, some of Aronofsky's patterns continue in The Fountain. His bold camera angles continue to excite his films. Aronofsky leaves his quick cutting technique behind, and strides boldly into a film not only filled with fantasy, but a film that is almost pure fantasy. Where Requiem repeats visual cues, The Fountain repeats dialogue and scenes (often involving one or more time-shifts.)  Aronofsky also returns Mark Margolis for their third collaboration and Ellen Burstyn for their second. He brings back his producer, much of his crew, composer Clint Mansell (their 3rd film), the Kronos Quartet  (2nd film), and director of photography Matthew Libatique (3rd film).


The story is difficult to decipher upon first viewing. In the story of the past, somehow the Mayans have hidden one of their massive temples at the midpoint among their three biggest temples. Atop the hidden temple, the Tree of Life grows.  Captain Tomas's quest is to find the Tree of Life so that Queen Isabel and Spain might somehow defeat the Roman Catholic Inquisition within its borders. Tomas's reward, besides eternal life, will be Queen Isabel's eternal hand in marriage. She has given him a ring to carry until his quest is complete. Only after drinking the sap is he to wear the ring as a symbol of their union. Tomas defeats the flaming sword, drinks sap from the Tree of Life, then instead of triumph, he turns into flowers that the tree will eventually absorb as fertilizer.  So far, so good, I suppose.


Dr. Tom and Izzie Creo in a museum
Next we're presented Dr. Tommy and Izzi Creo in the present. Tommy's wedding ring disappears after he looks into the nebula from the surgery prep room--goodness knows why the ring disappears or why a nebula does appear. Izzi has written eleven of twelve chapter of a book on the Mayan creation myth that starts in Spain. The story will end in the Orion constellation's fictitious golden star ("nebula, really") that the Mayans called Xibalba. After Izzi dies, Tommy, with the help of a sample from the ficti-tious natul tortuosa "that tree in Central America," develops the "cure for death," the fountain of youth. We do not see the cure come, but we know it is on its way. After the funeral, Tommy plants a sweetgum ball on Izzi's grave. We do not see it happen, but from the museum scene, we know the tree will grow and absorb Izzi.


Tommy with tree, in spaceship
Last is the future third of the film.  The mysterious bald man is actually Dr. Tommy Creo 500 years into the future. We know this from his memories / hallucinations of Izzi, from the quill from Izzi that he's kept 500 years, and from his original ring tattoo. Tommy probably gets his memories of Queen Isabel, however, from having taken a medicine created from the Tree of Life that consumed Tomas. The tree in the spaceship, with its bark like the neck hair of Izzi, is the American Sweetgum tree that grew over and around Izzi's grave. It is not just the essence of Izzi. To Tommy, that tree and Izzi are one and the same. Tommy has journeyed from earth in his spherical bubble of a spaceship to tend and transport the tree (Izzi) and himself to the Golden Nebula in Orion, Xibalba. The nebula surrounds a dying star that, upon its supernova, will give birth to more stars. Though immortal, Tommy and Izzi will be killed upon arrival to their destination, together forever. "Death turns all to ash, thus, death frees every soul."


The film, or my interpretation of it,  is derailed as soon as future Tommy reaches 1000 years to the past to retrieve the ring. Aronofsky may have derailed it even earlier when the Mayan guard with the flaming sword surrenders to Tomas due to a vision, or due to somehow sensing that Tomas is future Tommy.  Aron-ofsky has violated Roger Ebert's "Mysterious Object Antecedents Myth." He describes is as follows,


Whenever a movie involves time travel, there will always be an object that travels between the past and future without ever having actually come from anywhere. Example: in the beginning of SOMEWHERE IN TIME, an old Jane Seymour gives the young Christopher Reeve a pocket watch. He travels back in time to find her, taking the watch with him, and accidentally leaves it there. She keeps it, grows old, and—voilà—the cycle repeats itself. But where did the pocket watch come from in the first place?
   
Except this mysterious object is not an object, but a character that has come from nowhere:  future Tommy. Future Tommy does not exist without Tomas becoming part of the tree. But Tomas does not get to the tree without the aid of future Tommy.

The final 15 minutes will confuse and confound the most open-minded viewers--at least the ones whose minds are not so wide open that their brains have fallen out--and the rare soul who interprets the film as Aronofsky had intended. Aronofsky has made a creative film, shimmering with beauty, that is ultimately jarred free of logic's moorings and forever obscures any wisdom or story it was hoping to tell.  


To Mr. Aronofsky I say, "Please, leave me alone.  I know how it ends."

Trailer for The Fountain